Europe & Asia via the Trans Siberia Route

Europe & Asia via the Trans Siberia Route

Koens new journey is about to start. This time it’s all about exploring Europe and Asia. Wherever possible, I’ll be trying to travel by train or ferry. A slower way of traveling should bring a nice pace to collect some impressions and meet some people.

There have been a couple of series I’ve been working on. Some of these are in line with the long term photo documentary projects, some are shorter missions for clients.

Interview series

I have been working on a series of interviews with people who take their destiny in their own hand. It’s a slow cooking project over a longer time. While I can find tons of these people here in New York, I try to get a broader view, so combining this with my travel-passion sounds like a great plan. My trip alongside the routes to the east will hopefully bring some new, different, fresh insights in what drives people, and how society deals with them.

Partner Project

When seeking parters with whom I can make this venture of traveling with a camera sustainable, I found a great organization that choose to work with me. We defined a project that will be both the cornerstone of a new initiative inside their company AND that at the same time will be used as the core of their annual event. I’m pretty thrilled to work with a visionary group of people on a very unique way of bringing my work, their corporate values and some smart marketing and business development in one project. More about that in the last weeks of this year.

Location independent working: Digital Nomad

Another organization in Europe, active in strategic HR asked me to work with them on their content and website. Because of the quality of the team, the procedures in place and the tools to communicate, my job can be done location independent. This trip will allow me to seek the pros and cons of such a work. I will write about those findings here, as well as for a leading HR-company that is of course interested in what this looks like in reality.
At the same time, having no home location that I can physically escape to, gives both a calm and an anxious feeling. It’ll be interesting to see how that develops over these next travel weeks.

Passion

I’m very passionate about traveling and photography. Seeking new places, discovering them and trying to document them, is something I don’t have to be told twice. And if you think I live the dream, I partially am. But there’s a flipside on everything. It’s a less “certain” way of living, and there is very little money in this way of working. You have to be really convinced that becoming wealthy isn’t important if you can be happy . That will often include really not having the cash to do what you like. It’ll be my goal to live this trip on a very (very!) limited budget. Not only because I want to, but because I have to. No regrets however: the last months I’ve seen again where real richness is found.

Trains, Ferries, Planes

The original idea was to do London Hanoi by train. That required however that all visa would work the way I hoped for. But getting into Belarus is still not that easy, as is getting unlimited access to China. So I had to add flights to get from Vilnius to Saint Petersburg, and again to avoid having to enter China more than my visa allowed me when I go from Hong Kong to Hanoi. Beside these, I’ll be using the modern train systems (Eurostar, Thalys and ICE) in the Western Part of Europe. I will rely on the classical “Trans-Siberian” system between Moscow and Beijing.

How and where:

Trans Europe

My journey will depart in the UK. The newer European railway systems are my first couple thousand of kilometers. I have been on Thalys and Eurostar before. The ICE train will be a first,a sn will many train systems later in this journey. I’ll visit France, Germany and Poland, further going by rail into the Baltic states. That’s where I will have to trade in trains for planes.

In order to avoid complicated (and outside of the available time now) visa issues in Belarus for this trip, I’ll hop on a plane to St Petersburg from Vilnius. Minsk is still pretty high on the list of places I like to visit, but it’ll be for another time. From St Petersburg, it’s back on the train to Moscow.

Trans Siberia

In Moscow, I’ll board the Trans Siberian train. With a few stops along the way, this will take me 10,000 kilometer away from Moscow. The end pont of my route will be Beijing, but not before I make a stop in Mongolia. The Trans Siberia part is of course the core of the Trans Siberian railroads, a name used to cover a whole set of trains crossing the continent. While the Trans Siberian train goes all the way to Vladivostok, I will change after lake Baikal to the trains that continue into Mongolia and China.

Mongolia

Mongolia fascinated me since the longest time. There’s probably little chance I will understand the country in a bit more than a week, but I believe it to be an amazing way to get to know it. Now a buffer between China and Russia, this was once the force that rules most of the continent. I’ll be in search of traces of that heritage here. Genghis Khan, here I come!

I was last in Shanghai in 2010, so I can’t hardly wait to what it will look like after 6 years.

South-Korea

Friends who were here, are all raving about the culture, the language, the gadgets, the friendliness of the people. So my expectations are pretty high. Just like Japan, it’s not a 100% sure I’ll add it to the trip, but who knows…

Japan

Japan only recent made it to my bucket list. Earlier, I did not felt attracted to the country of the rising sun. The more I read however, and the more people I meet who lived or traveld in Japan, the more I got curious gets in the game. Tokyo and especially Kyoto give me so far nothing that I tangibly can identify as being the things I’d hope to see, the people I’d hope to meet and so on.

South East Asia

When I leave Japan Japan, by way of China, I’ll continue the trip via Shanghai and Hong Kong towards Vietnam, Cambodia and Thailand. Laos and Myanmar are high on the list as well, but in life (even as a traveler) there are choices to be made. Since I’ve never traveled this area, and now being a divemaster, I’m considering how to combine the work for the clients with some time off, to see how the Thailand Gulf looks like below the surface, for example.

Preparations

I’m preparing the trip as we speak. After making a draft of the route, I started getting the necessary visa. With Russia and China being the main part of the route, getting those visa delivered was the highest priority. For Russia, the US passport holders have the chance to get a 3-year visa with multiple entries. For Europeans, it’s a visa restricted to the itinerary as it was delivered to the consulate. I just received my Chinese visa as as well, so the basics of the travel administration are now done!

Follow me along

I’ll do my best to often post some impressions from my travel here on Boarding Today. If you like the news delivered in your mailbox, at most once a month, there’s the newsletter for you!

The featured image is based on a photo by Marc Dalio (marcdalio on Flickr), used under Common Creative License

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About Koen Blanquart

Koen Blanquart is a traveling freelance photo journalist. In Boarding Today, he describes his adventures in travel and outdoor life. While Koen has his homebase in New York, he's feeling at home while traveling all over the planet. He lives as Digital Nomad most of the year.

Koen Blanquart

Koen Blanquart is a startup veteran whose mission is to help companies tap into the soul of corporate social responsibility. Through artistic projects around the world, such as photo and video documentaries, he helps companies highlight their CSR efforts and proactively show how their actions support their values. Whether he’s photographing grizzly bears in remote Alaska, riding on the trans-Siberian railway, or crewing a small sailboat in Antarctica, he brings an eco sensibility to his work, lives rough and captures pristine footage for clients’ projects.
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